Buddhist teachings on 729 slabs made of stone, 3-ft, 6-in by 5-ft (107 by 153-cm) each, on the grounds of the Kuthodaw pagoda, around a central golden pagoda in Mandalay, Myanmar, 1860-1868.

The Waynai Bible, the largest copy (43.5 in by 98 in, or 110 cm by 249 cm) of the entire King James Bible, completed by Louis Waynai in Los Angeles, California, completed in 1930 after two years of work on his homemade rubber stamp press.

Bhutan: A Visual Odyssey Across the Kingdom, a 118-page book printed in 2003, composed of photographs taken in Bhutan, created by MIT scientist Michael Hawley. It measures 5-ft by 7-ft (1.53 m by 2.13 m) when opened.

It cost $2,000 and more than a US gallon (3.8 L) of ink to produce the book, and sold for $10,000 on Amazon.

A compilation of 437 featured Wikipedia articles in a 5000-page, 1-ft, 7-in (48.2-cm) book by Rob Matthews, a graphic design student in 2011.

Earth Platinum, a 6 by 4.5-ft (183 by 137-m), 128-page atlas by the Sydney-based Millennium House. 31 copies were produced and sold for $100,000 each in 2012.

A 16.4-ft by 26.44-ft (5 by 8.06-m), 3307-lb (1500-kg) book about the life of Prophet Muhammed titled "This Is Muhammed," unveiled in Dubai, February 2012.

Bonus: The statue of Ruhnama (The Book of the Soul), a book written by Saparmurat Niyazov, also known as the Türkmenbaşy (Leader of Turkmen).

The Ruhnama gives spiritual and moral guidance to the Turkmen people, but contains many stories and the autobiography of Niyazov, as well. In 2006, Niyazov said that God told him if any student who read the book three times, they would automatically get into heaven.